Guided Reading Program Guided Reading (GR) is an instructional approach/program that involves teachers working with small groups of students in grades 1-3 who demonstrate similar reading behaviours and who read at a similar instructional level. Texts are considered to be at a student’s instructional level if they are read at about 90% accuracy (90-94% accuracy is considered to be an instructional reading level) (Clay, 2002). The reading groups are flexible and based on short-term needs. GR is a time for students to read unfamiliar text that has some challenge to it. The students apply known strategies to the unfamiliar text. The teacher then provides support in developing new strategies while reading. It is an opportunity for all the students in the group to independently and quietly read from their own copy of the text. GR develops students’ comprehension, fluency, and critical response to different types of text. It provides a supportive setting where students feel confident to meet new challenges. GR allows the teacher to observe students while they work with unfamiliar text and to provide ‘just in time’ instruction within meaningful contexts. Assessment for learning is embedded in the process as teachers take regular running records of student reading to inform instruction. Running records allow teachers to capture what students say and do while they are reading continuous text (Clay, 2002). Formal assessments of student reading are conducted four times during the course of the school year: at the beginning of the program to establish preliminary GR groups; in November, prior to fall report cards; in March, prior to spring report cards; and finally at the end of the year to track longitudinal growth and overall program effectiveness. The ultimate goal is for the students to achieve independent reading of increasingly difficult text. (An assumption that we may make is that independent reading implies reading with comprehension as well as fluency.)Fountas and Pinnell (1996) wrote that guided reading is not static and will vary over time as readers grow in knowledge, skill, and experience. Similarly, the materials and instruction provided by teachers will also change depending of the instructional level of the students. According to Fountas and Pinnell (2001), “it is important for all students to receive guided reading instruction at a level that allows them to process texts successfully with teacher support”. Therefore, it is possible that students in older grades (e.g., grade 4 or 5) may require guided reading instruction that is similar to the instruction provided in earlier grades. In their continuum of literacy learning, Fountas and Pinnell identify curriculum goals and characteristics of texts, for grades 3 to 8, that could be used to inform guided reading instruction with older students. The National Reading Panel (NICHD, 2000) has suggested that" teaching a combination of reading comprehension techniques is highly effective in helping students recall information, generate questions, and summarize texts". Discussion-based guided reading lessons are "geared toward creating richly textured opportunities for students’ conceptual and linguistic development" (Goldenberg, 1992). Goldenberg found that discussions surrounding texts has greater depth which can increase students’ language abilities. "Creating a text gradient means classifying books along a continuum based on the combination of variables that support and confirm readers’ strategic actions and offer the problem-solving opportunities that build the reading process" (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996). Members of the NRP found considerable evidence in research to conclude that guided oral reading procedures "tended to improve word recognition, fluency (speed and accuracy of oral reading), and comprehension with most groups." In their synthesis of research, they included a very wide range of guided oral reading techniques, some of which would not generally be used in guided reading lessons. However, teachers frequently do include some focused guided oral reading of passages or sections so that they can become more aware of factors related to fluency—pausing, phrasing, word stress, and intonation (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996).
What does the Program intend to Accomplish? Fountas and Pinnell state that guided reading leads to independent reading and gives children an opportunity to grow as individual readers. It provides the readers with an opportunity to develop and apply reading strategies so that they can independently read increasingly difficult texts and to read for meaning. Guided reading develops skills needed for independent reading, and assists in teaching students to learn how to introduce texts to themselves. Guided reading is part of a balanced literacy program which measures fluency and reading comprehension by using diagnostic and developmental reading assessments, daily observations, and gathering of anecdotal records. Teachers gather observational data over time to document progress which provides information to guide daily teaching and tracks the progress of individual students. This information is a basis for reporting to parents, helps a school staff to assess the effectiveness of the instructional program, and provides children with evidence of their growth. Guided reading also encourages home and community involvement by assisting parents to participate in the school curriculum, allowing opportunity for children to show their families what they are learning, and increases reading opportunities for students.According to Fountas and Pinnell (1996) the objective of Guided Reading is that teachers work with a small group of students who have similar reading levels and processes. The teacher selects and introduces new books and supports students reading the whole text to themselves while making teaching points during and after the reading. Guided reading provides the opportunity for students to read and attend to words in a wide variety of texts, and to use strategies to problem solve while reading for meaning. Special attention to letters and words and how they work are integrated through guided reading activities. Guided reading helps students become familiar with letter forms, learn to use visual aspects of print, provides opportunities to notice and use letters and words that are embedded in texts, provides opportunities to manipulate letters and make words, helps students link sounds with letters and letter clusters and helps students use what they know about words to solve new words. Students develop a network of strategies that assist in attending to information from meaning cues, structure or syntax, and visual information. Good readers search for and use meaning, language structure, and visual information by self-monitoring, cross-checking one source of information against another and self-correcting by predicting, monitoring, and searching for more information. Materials Required In order to run smoothly, guided reading programs need flexible leveled reading groups, planned guided reading lessons, research based phonics activities and word study skills for all levels of students, a variety of leveled and challenging texts and genres, charts of poems and songs, labels and directions for materials, a word wall, alphabet charts, and dictionaries. Sufficient space is required to allow teachers to create easy to manage literacy centres with bins and bookshelves to store the collection of guided reading items. A large group area for demonstrations and meetings, an area for small group, partner and independent work, and quiet areas separated from noisy areas. A clipboard with observation charts, running record forms, and student records and other data collection tools will be used to identify students' needs and plan instruction. Professional development and training will need to be implemented in order to ensure success in the guided reading program. What does the program "not" do? Guided reading programs do not specifically aim to measure phonemic awareness and alphabetic principle, however, there may be an unintended outcome in the results. Guided reading does not teach concepts in isolation and does not have a pre-set of lessons or materials that you use. "Round robin" reading is eliminated as each reader reads the whole text or a unified portion quietly to themselves. Guided reading does not have learners complete exercises or workbook pages as students may write or draw about reading and challenging and leveled books are selected for groups rather than following a rigid sequence for the whole class. In all groups, no matter what the level is, teachers teach for a full range of strategic actions: word solving, searching for and using information, self-monitoring and correcting, summarizing information, maintaining fluency, adjusting for purpose and genre, predicting, making connections (personal, other texts, and world knowledge), synthesizing, inferring, analyzing, and critiquing (Pinnell & Fountas, 2008).
Guided Reading (GR) is an instructional approach/program that involves teachers working with small groups of students in grades 1-3 who demonstrate similar reading behaviours and who read at a similar instructional level. Texts are considered to be at a student’s instructional level if they are read at about 90% accuracy (90-94% accuracy is considered to be an instructional reading level) (Clay, 2002). The reading groups are flexible and based on short-term needs. GR is a time for students to read unfamiliar text that has some challenge to it. The students apply known strategies to the unfamiliar text. The teacher then provides support in developing new strategies while reading. It is an opportunity for all the students in the group to independently and quietly read from their own copy of the text. GR develops students’ comprehension, fluency, and critical response to different types of text. It provides a supportive setting where students feel confident to meet new challenges. GR allows the teacher to observe students while they work with unfamiliar text and to provide ‘just in time’ instruction within meaningful contexts. Assessment for learning is embedded in the process as teachers take regular running records of student reading to inform instruction. Running records allow teachers to capture what students say and do while they are reading continuous text (Clay, 2002). Formal assessments of student reading are conducted four times during the course of the school year: at the beginning of the program to establish preliminary GR groups; in November, prior to fall report cards; in March, prior to spring report cards; and finally at the end of the year to track longitudinal growth and overall program effectiveness. The ultimate goal is for the students to achieve independent reading of increasingly difficult text. (An assumption that we may make is that independent reading implies reading with comprehension as well as fluency.)Fountas and Pinnell (1996) wrote that guided reading is not static and will vary over time as readers grow in knowledge, skill, and experience. Similarly, the materials and instruction provided by teachers will also change depending of the instructional level of the students. According to Fountas and Pinnell (2001), “it is important for all students to receive guided reading instruction at a level that allows them to process texts successfully with teacher support”. Therefore, it is possible that students in older grades (e.g., grade 4 or 5) may require guided reading instruction that is similar to the instruction provided in earlier grades. In their continuum of literacy learning, Fountas and Pinnell identify curriculum goals and characteristics of texts, for grades 3 to 8, that could be used to inform guided reading instruction with older students.
The National Reading Panel (NICHD, 2000) has suggested that" teaching a combination of reading comprehension techniques is highly effective in helping students recall information, generate questions, and summarize texts". Discussion-based guided reading lessons are "geared toward creating richly textured opportunities for students’ conceptual and linguistic development" (Goldenberg, 1992). Goldenberg found that discussions surrounding texts has greater depth which can increase students’ language abilities. "Creating a text gradient means classifying books along a continuum based on the combination of variables that support and confirm readers’ strategic actions and offer the problem-solving opportunities that build the reading process" (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996). Members of the NRP found considerable evidence in research to conclude that guided oral reading procedures "tended to improve word recognition, fluency (speed and accuracy of oral reading), and comprehension with most groups." In their synthesis of research, they included a very wide range of guided oral reading techniques, some of which would not generally be used in guided reading lessons. However, teachers frequently do include some focused guided oral reading of passages or sections so that they can become more aware of factors related to fluency—pausing, phrasing, word stress, and intonation (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996).
What does the Program intend to Accomplish?
Fountas and Pinnell state that guided reading leads to independent reading and gives children an opportunity to grow as individual readers. It provides the readers with an opportunity to develop and apply reading strategies so that they can independently read increasingly difficult texts and to read for meaning. Guided reading develops skills needed for independent reading, and assists in teaching students to learn how to introduce texts to themselves. Guided reading is part of a balanced literacy program which measures fluency and reading comprehension by using diagnostic and developmental reading assessments, daily observations, and gathering of anecdotal records. Teachers gather observational data over time to document progress which provides information to guide daily teaching and tracks the progress of individual students. This information is a basis for reporting to parents, helps a school staff to assess the effectiveness of the instructional program, and provides children with evidence of their growth. Guided reading also encourages home and community involvement by assisting parents to participate in the school curriculum, allowing opportunity for children to show their families what they are learning, and increases reading opportunities for students.According to Fountas and Pinnell (1996) the objective of Guided Reading is that teachers work with a small group of students who have similar reading levels and processes. The teacher selects and introduces new books and supports students reading the whole text to themselves while making teaching points during and after the reading. Guided reading provides the opportunity for students to read and attend to words in a wide variety of texts, and to use strategies to problem solve while reading for meaning. Special attention to letters and words and how they work are integrated through guided reading activities. Guided reading helps students become familiar with letter forms, learn to use visual aspects of print, provides opportunities to notice and use letters and words that are embedded in texts, provides opportunities to manipulate letters and make words, helps students link sounds with letters and letter clusters and helps students use what they know about words to solve new words. Students develop a network of strategies that assist in attending to information from meaning cues, structure or syntax, and visual information. Good readers search for and use meaning, language structure, and visual information by self-monitoring, cross-checking one source of information against another and self-correcting by predicting, monitoring, and searching for more information.
Materials Required
In order to run smoothly, guided reading programs need flexible leveled reading groups, planned guided reading lessons, research based phonics activities and word study skills for all levels of students, a variety of leveled and challenging texts and genres, charts of poems and songs, labels and directions for materials, a word wall, alphabet charts, and dictionaries. Sufficient space is required to allow teachers to create easy to manage literacy centres with bins and bookshelves to store the collection of guided reading items. A large group area for demonstrations and meetings, an area for small group, partner and independent work, and quiet areas separated from noisy areas. A clipboard with observation charts, running record forms, and student records and other data collection tools will be used to identify students' needs and plan instruction. Professional development and training will need to be implemented in order to ensure success in the guided reading program.
What does the program "not" do?
Guided reading programs do not specifically aim to measure phonemic awareness and alphabetic principle, however, there may be an unintended outcome in the results. Guided reading does not teach concepts in isolation and does not have a pre-set of lessons or materials that you use. "Round robin" reading is eliminated as each reader reads the whole text or a unified portion quietly to themselves. Guided reading does not have learners complete exercises or workbook pages as students may write or draw about reading and challenging and leveled books are selected for groups rather than following a rigid sequence for the whole class. In all groups, no matter what the level is, teachers teach for a full range of strategic actions: word solving, searching for and using information, self-monitoring and correcting, summarizing information, maintaining fluency, adjusting for purpose and genre, predicting, making connections (personal, other texts, and world knowledge), synthesizing, inferring, analyzing, and critiquing (Pinnell & Fountas, 2008).